For anyone reading my earlier posting, please do not interpret it as a veiled attempt to sell more rifles. After reading my initial post again I can just hear someone saying, “There’s ol’ TexasMac again, once more deviously attempting to use this forum to sell rifles”. If you feel that way, you couldn’t be more wrong. If you have read my posts on this and other forums, going back as far as 1996, I have continued to post updates on Browning and now Winchester BPC rifles as I continue to research and try to stay current on the subject. I sell Browning and Winchester BPCRs as a sideline and do well to break even on the sales. The main reason is it helps in my research and I get to meet and exchange information with lots of folks on this and other forums that share the same interests, and with new shooters to the sport of BPCR silhouette and Creedmoor competition.
I have and will continue giving Denny Wilcox & Browning a lot of credit for stepping up and introducing a reasonably priced “complete” BPC production rifle in 1996, at a time when the only “good” BPCR silhouette rifles were available from custom suppliers costing much more. It’s unfortunate that a few years later they decided to discontinue the entire M1885 line, including the three versions/calibers of BPCRs. Now, under the Winchester brand, Browning & Davidsons is giving shooters another chance to purchase one. I only wish the rifles were also available in .45-70, .40-65 or .38-55, but the current crop of Win. Limited Edition Creedmoor rifles are certainly chambered for a very popular round (.45-90), which is ideal for the extended target ranges in Creedmoor competition and very successfully used by some for silhouette.
Wayne